How to Use undifferentiated in a Sentence

undifferentiated

adjective
  • The present drags minute to minute, or else flies by in an undifferentiated mush.
    Washington Post, 14 Oct. 2020
  • When the tear gas popped and their own adrenaline flowed, the crowd blurred into an undifferentiated mass of threats that had to be put down.
    Sarah Jeong, The New Republic, 3 Sep. 2020
  • Maybe the gardens leading down to the sea, or one of the pictures hanging on the wall, or the towering waves, the grain of the image like undifferentiated krill.
    Amitava Kumar, The Atlantic, 6 Oct. 2021
  • These are the compounds added to stem cells in culture that keep them undifferentiated stem cells.
    Anna Funk, Discover Magazine, 5 Dec. 2018
  • In this picture of cheery home life going off the rails, stimuli come at us fast and undifferentiated.
    Barbara Schreiber, charlotteobserver, 17 May 2017
  • And yet every season, Gap churns out the same bland range of undifferentiated product which has barely changed over the past 20 years.
    Marc Bain, Quartzy, 31 May 2019
  • But anybody can put an NFT up for sale on these sites, and visiting one is to wade through an undifferentiated mass of images.
    Simon Willis, Fortune, 14 Apr. 2021
  • The day was overcast; the high library windows held thin blocks of undifferentiated light.
    Michael W. Clune, Harper's Magazine, 7 Apr. 2023
  • Or maybe Stadia users could pay a few dollars for an hour of undifferentiated Stadia gameplay time to be used across any game in the catalog.
    Kyle Orland, Ars Technica, 20 Oct. 2020
  • In contrast the features of his white subjects tend be impassive and undifferentiated when they are seen at all.
    Roberta Smith, New York Times, 7 Apr. 2022
  • His book serves as a corrective for those who perceive the freedom struggle as an undifferentiated blur of events and symbols that magically sprang up out of nowhere in the mid-1950s.
    Washington Post, 19 Feb. 2021
  • That’s our new reality: Without offices to go to—or, in too many cases, jobs to go to—time has become an undifferentiated lump.
    Steven Levy, Wired, 24 Apr. 2020
  • So much of the tech industry today is about making things look professional, maybe convincing Apple to let you into the App Store to join the great undifferentiated mass of other apps.
    Paul Ford, Wired, 18 Aug. 2020
  • The gene activity data showed that even when the frog embryo appears to be an undifferentiated blob, its cells have begun to take on their eventual identities, say as a tail bud.
    Elizabeth Pennisi, Science | AAAS, 26 Apr. 2018
  • But in most cases, their current brand is outdated and undifferentiated or limits their future potential and the cost of not rebranding is now too high to ignore.
    Jim Heininger, Forbes, 16 Mar. 2023
  • There are multiple planes of action — rare for Sorkin, who prefers to shoot undifferentiated medium angles of people talking.
    Darren Franich, EW.com, 25 Mar. 2022
  • Turn off the lights, and the undifferentiated shadows might reassert themselves as recognizable shapes and objects.
    Suzannah Showler, Harper’s Magazine , 27 Apr. 2022
  • In addition, Richard Brown, who was maitre d' and the public face of the restaurant, has been diagnosed with a rare cancer, undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma.
    Polly Campbell, Cincinnati.com, 27 Mar. 2020
  • Until about 14 days after conception, the human embryo looks like an undifferentiated blob of cells, which is one of the reasons the two week timeframe made sense, several scientists said.
    USA Today, 2 May 2021
  • And an undifferentiated glut of candidates might be good for party unity but not so hot for voter interest.
    Ed Kilgore, Daily Intelligencer, 2 Aug. 2017
  • And the style consistently overwhelms the subject, so that every object — body, flower, sky, tree — appears to be made of the same fluffy substance, and all bleeds and blends into a sickening soup of undifferentiated prettiness.
    Sebastian Smee, Washington Post, 25 June 2019
  • Each of us starts out as a ball of undifferentiated cells, a tiny speck of primordial mass tasked with assembling itself into a four-limbed, brain-bearing individual.
    Eric Boodman, STAT, 23 Oct. 2019
  • Managing such complex infrastructure and diverse data planes needs a single pane of glass approach that takes care of the undifferentiated heavy lifting around the data plane.
    Rohit Amarnath, Forbes, 10 Oct. 2022
  • In the case of the care centre employee, the court said the rule at issue appeared to have been applied in a general and undifferentiated way, as the employer also required an employee wearing a religious cross to remove that sign.
    NBC News, 15 July 2021
  • Exactly how the slugs regenerate their bodies from the head down is still unknown, but the researchers suspect stem cells — special undifferentiated cells that have the potential to be turned into any type of cell — play an important role.
    Harry Baker, Scientific American, 9 Mar. 2021
  • But other elements were recognizable, like the flat vowels and the plaid shirts and the helpful practicality, like the lonesomeness of the undifferentiated plains, like the apposition of wilderness and chain stores.
    Alexis Soloski, New York Times, 27 Nov. 2019
  • Listening to all that music felt like sifting through a data dump, not like processing two albums—even Future's gooey AutoTune flow lost some of its sui generis punch in their undifferentiated mass.
    Leor Galil, Chicago Reader, 2 Oct. 2017
  • Not just a digital version on undifferentiated glass, but no go-to screen point whatsoever?
    Lisa Eadicicco, Time, 30 Aug. 2017
  • There are few chances that its managers dare to take, and the individual talents of its directors and actors are submerged in the undifferentiated sludge of its computerized spectacle.
    Richard Brody, The New Yorker, 13 July 2022
  • These bit players work, whisper, chatter, laugh, philosophize, run, hide, weep, lament and survive, sometimes as an undifferentiated human blur and sometimes with great individual vividness.
    Justin Chang, Los Angeles Times, 14 Dec. 2023

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'undifferentiated.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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